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Type: Article
Published: 2016-11-10
Page range: 244–250
Abstract views: 105
PDF downloaded: 1

The ‘foremost ornithological mystery of Costa Rica’: Amazilia alfaroana Underwood, 1896

Field Museum of Natural History, 1400 South Lakeshore Drive, Chicago, IL 60605, USA.
BirdLife International, The David Attenborough Building, Pembroke Street, Cambridge CB2 3QZ, UK, and Bird Group, Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, Akeman Street, Tring, Herts HP23 6AP, UK.
Aves Trochilidae Costa Rica Amazilia alfaroana Volcán de Miravalles

Abstract

The hummingbird Amazilia alfaroana is known from a single specimen, collected on the Volcán de Miravalles, in north-west Costa Rica, in September 1895. Since the early 20th century, the taxon has been almost always been treated as a subspecies of Indigo-capped Hummingbird A. cyanifrons, which is otherwise endemic to Colombia, although it has also been tentatively suggested that the holotype might represent a hybrid between two unnamed species of trochilids. Our detailed analysis of the specimen reveals species-level differences between A. alfaroana and A. cyanifrons, and no evidence of characters that might suggest a hybrid between two species known to occur in the relevant region. Until molecular techniques have been brought to bear, we believe that A. alfaroana is best treated as a possibly now extinct species.

 

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